Read Desperate Husbands Online
Authors: Richard Glover
The film industry is always attacked for doing the same thing over and over again; but not the book industry. Every year the booksellers’ catalogues contain ideas that are just so fresh and original. Why not take a look at this year’s bumper crop?
Whoops! Some Poo Just Came out of My Bum
by I.P. Nightly.
Another scatological triumph from the international author. Why not buy the set, including the sequels
Whoops! Some Poo Came Out of My Bum Again
, and
Whoops! Some Poo Came Out of My Dog’s Bum.
Who but I.P. Nightly could reveal that children find poo and wee jokes this funny? Guaranteed to give children a lifelong love of reading—but only of poo and wee jokes.
How Come Everyone Else Isn’t as Spiritual as Me?
by Michael Lunatic.
Yet another volume in a lifelong series by
the Melbourne poet and cartoonist, in which he points out that that ordinary people lead lives of mediocrity and desolation due to their strange unwillingness to be more like Michael Lunatic. Volume forty-three in the series.
How I Took Off My Fancy Pants
by Catherine d’Oats.
Prose like this has been found for decades in dirty magazines such as
Penthouse
and
Hustler.
Yet Catherine d’Oats is a French intellectual, a female and a dead-set fancy-pants type writer. No wonder this work has sold 300,000 copies and been hailed as a breakthrough in our understanding of human desire. Maybe what’s special is knowing that Catherine has such a large vocabulary yet chooses to use only those words that have four letters. (Claims that Catherine d’Oats is the
nom de plume
of a bloke called Barry who runs a London chain of dirty cinemas are currently the subject of legal action.)
Grind!
by Professor Joseph Brezenski.
Last year it was the history of the screwdriver; before that the history of the clock, the zipper and the salted cod. Now Harvard historian Joseph Brezenski has spent ten years charting the history of the pepper grinder. As he puts it: ‘Through studying this one artefact, the whole history of human civilisation can be told—from the first journeys into the new world, through to the development of the very large pepper grinder in today’s Italian restaurants.’ Certainly the professor’s thrilling narrative of innovation and revolution, set against the conservative world of the spice establishment, is well worth its 670 pages. The professor is currently working on a history of the sock, in two companion volumes, one on the history of the right sock, and one on the history of the left.
Boo Hoo. It Wasn’t My Fault. An Anthology of Australian Political Memoirs.
Collected in one volume, here are the political memoirs of a whole generation of Australian politicians—divided up according to their excuse for why it all went belly-up. With an introduction by British TV star Ali G, chapters include: Is It Because I Black?; Is It Because I Woman?; and Is It Because I Just a Deadhead?
The Buttered Toast Book
by Jamie Olive.
Who needs to buy a single cookbook when you can fill your house with specialist volumes—whole thumping tomes dedicated to oysters, eggs or artichokes? In this beautifully designed book, Jamie Olive tells you how to make toast—including advice on how to choose the freshest bread at the supermarket; how to spread the butter right to the edges; plus a sumptuous photo display of jams and marmalades. And here’s the good news: at $97.50 you’ll have no money left for anything other than toast. Jamie’s companion volume,
The Water Book—How to Pour It
,
How to Taste It and How to Enjoy it with Friends
, will be out in the autumn.
Pulling Up Stumps
by Wayne Warrens.
Cricket books are not actually meant to be read; they are meant to be given—usually to an elderly uncle who’ll receive the gift by mumbling miserably: ‘I don’t know why she gave me a book. I’ve already got a book.’ This one has a durable cover and a cheap price, and so comes Highly Recommended.
White Knuckles
by Zadie Zee.
Being a writer used to be one of the few artistic jobs in which you could achieve fame and fortune without being good-looking. Thank goodness that
loophole has finally been closed. Evelyn Waugh, George Orwell and H.G. Wells—all of them just too ugly to make it in today’s British literary scene. Sure Zadie Zee’s prose is unremarkable and her stories poorly developed, but check out the author picture on the back! Alas, Hanif Kureishi and Margaret Atwood write better books, but compare the author shots. No wonder bookshops have now made it compulsory to purchase Zadie’s novel by the time-honoured method of not stocking anything else.
Happy reading.
‘Our income is zero. The
salary goes into the bank but
it’s spoken for before it
lands. It’s like throwing a
dead dog into a tank of
piranhas. Gone within
minutes. Just a few scraps
floating to the surface. Going
to the Flexiteller is like
being witness to a massacre.
Can we move onto the next
question, if you don’t mind?’
It’s census night and Sally Smith-Frazzle is at home, ready to fill out the official form. But she finds it’s impossible to give yes/no answers to all these questions. Maybe she’ll just have to bail up the census collector and explain first-hand some of the complexities of life.
‘Well, what’s your name?’ asks the census collector.
‘It’s Frazzle. Well, actually it’s Smith-Frazzle. We hyphenated to suit the kids but when Becky started high school she got embarrassed, so we stick with Frazzle now, except for the older boy, who hates his father so much he refuses to use the name. I take the piss out of him and call him The Boy Formerly Known as Frazzle but he just gives me a hostile stare. As if it’s my fault that Trevor’s his father. I tell him: “Why blame me? Blame the overproof Bundy rum at
the Willow Hotel in Fremantle.” But it’s hard to get through to teenagers, don’t you reckon?’
‘The next thing is income,’ says the census collector. ‘You need to write in your income.’
‘In what sense do you mean income? In the sense that money comes in and Trevor and I sit down and decide how to spend it? You’ve got to be joking. Put down zero. Our income is zero. The salary goes into the bank but it’s spoken for before it lands. It’s like throwing a dead dog into a tank of piranhas. Gone within minutes. Just a few scraps floating to the surface. Going to the Flexiteller is like being witness to a massacre. Can we move onto the next question, if you don’t mind?’
‘Your age?’
‘Based on date of birth? Or how we look in the mirror? And if it’s the mirror, are you talking morning or night? Take a reading before breakfast and you’d be handing me a senior’s card. Here’s the problem: I was one of those people that went straight from pimples to wrinkles. I was aged thirty-five years, three months and seven days—and then the changeover hit. Squeezed my last pimple on Monday. By Wednesday I looked like a geriatric bloodhound. I just regret I didn’t have more fun on the Tuesday night. It was like
Anne of the Thousand Days
. I had a window of opportunity of about three hours. I could have worked my way through the front bar of the Manzil Room and then spent the next ten years resting up. But you don’t know these things at the time, do you?’
‘Gender?’
‘We certainly started out as man and woman. I remember that quite clearly. But it gets a bit harder to tell once you hit your forties. Trevor’s now drinking so much beer I swear he’s started to develop breasts. About a B-cup, I’d say. Quite perky, not too saggy. Put some tassels on them and you’d have quite a show. I half suspect he’s slowly turning into a woman. Catch him side-on and you’d say he was pregnant. About eight months, with the baby lying breach. Sometimes I look at him sitting on the couch, and I say to myself, “That man could go into first stage labour at any moment and here I am just lying around. I should be plotting the fastest route to the hospital.”
‘Not that he’s the only one experiencing a sex change. I seem to be slowly turning into a bloke. Every week Trevor loses more hair off his body and somehow it’s popping up on mine. It’s like some weird transference is going on. I’ve tried sleeping with a pillow between us but still it happens. Once you’re down past my hips, it’s like
The Planet of the Apes.
Actually, you look a bit that way yourself; maybe we could share some tips for keeping it at bay?’
‘What about this question? Number in household tonight? Do you think you can manage that?’
‘Depends what we are eating. The boy likes meat. Promise him meat and he’ll be here. Otherwise it’s YMCA—Yesterday’s Muck Cooked Again. Tonight? Trevor’s cooking tonight—chops, sausages and a bit of bacon. The boy calls it Turf and Turf. I’ve promised to make Bad-for-you-potatoes. It’s my signature dish. Spuds with about half a ton of dairy product. Without it, Trevor would be half the man he is today. I could give you like the recipe, if you’d like.’
‘Do you speak a language other than English at home?’
‘I’d have to say yes. The Boy Formerly Known as Frazzle doesn’t really speak at all. He just grunts. Who knows what language he’s trying to speak, but it’s certainly not English. Trevor and I used to talk our heads off but you run out of steam after a while. We still communicate through body language. You might like to write that down: the language of love. Even with the breasts, he’s still a very attractive man. Maybe even more attractive. Now, will that be all?’
Life is so confusing. As a teenage boy I conserved water with the best of them. I never showered; cleaned my teeth only occasionally; didn’t need to shave; forgot to flush; and left all the dirty plates in the sink ‘for Later’. I also failed to water pot plants, even ones left in my direct care, with the result that they died, never to require a drop of water again.
In retrospect: I was a water crusader; an environmental saint. If the fifteen-year-old me was around right now, the green movement would give me a medal. What others called ‘grubby’, ‘skanky’ and ‘downright stomach-turning’ was merely a zealous attitude to water conservation. With Australia now facing a water crisis, I look back over the conversations I’ve had with various flatmates over the years and find in them a veritable How-to Guide to Water Savings.
It certainly is difficult being ahead of one’s time.